concurrent_vector#

[containers.concurrent_vector]

concurrent_vector is a class template for a vector that can be concurrently grown and accessed.

Class Template Synopsis#

// Defined in header <oneapi/tbb/concurrent_vector.h>

namespace oneapi {
    namespace tbb {

        template <typename T,
                  typename Allocator = cache_aligned_allocator<T>>
        class concurrent_vector {
            using value_type = T;
            using allocator_type = Allocator;

            using size_type = <implementation-defined unsigned integer type>;
            using difference_type = <implementation-defined signed integer type>;

            using reference = value_type&;
            using const_reference = const value_type&;

            using pointer = typename std::allocator_traits<allocator_type>::pointer;
            using const_pointer = typename std::allocator_traits<allocator_type>::const_pointer;

            using iterator = <implementation-defined RandomAccessIterator>;
            using const_iterator = <implementation-defined constant RandomAccessIterator>;

            using reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<iterator>;
            using const_reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<const_iterator>;

            using range_type = <implementation-defined ContainerRange>;
            using const_range_type = <implementation-defined constant ContainerRange>;

            // Construction, destruction, copying
            concurrent_vector();
            explicit concurrent_vector( const allocator_type& alloc ) noexcept;

            explicit concurrent_vector( size_type count, const value_type& value,
                                        const allocator_type& alloc = allocator_type() );

            explicit concurrent_vector( size_type count,
                                        const allocator_type& alloc = allocator_type() );

            template <typename InputIterator>
            concurrent_vector( InputIterator first, InputIterator last,
                               const allocator_type& alloc = allocator_type() );

            concurrent_vector( std::initializer_list<value_type> init,
                               const allocator_type& alloc = allocator_type() );

            concurrent_vector( const concurrent_vector& other );
            concurrent_vector( const concurrent_vector& other, const allocator_type& alloc );

            concurrent_vector( concurrent_vector&& other ) noexcept;
            concurrent_vector( concurrent_vector&& other, const allocator_type& alloc );

            ~concurrent_vector();

            concurrent_vector& operator=( const concurrent_vector& other );

            concurrent_vector& operator=( concurrent_vector&& other ) noexcept(/*See details*/);

            concurrent_vector& operator=( std::initializer_list<value_type> init );

            void assign( size_type count, const value_type& value );

            template <typename InputIterator>
            void assign( InputIterator first, InputIterator last );

            void assign( std::initializer_list<value_type> init );

            // Concurrent growth
            iterator grow_by( size_type delta );
            iterator grow_by( size_type delta, const value_type& value );

            template <typename InputIterator>
            iterator grow_by( InputIterator first, InputIterator last );

            iterator grow_by( std::initializer_list<value_type> init );

            iterator grow_to_at_least( size_type n );
            iterator grow_to_at_least( size_type n, const value_type& value );

            iterator push_back( const value_type& value );
            iterator push_back( value_type&& value );

            template <typename... Args>
            iterator emplace_back( Args&&... args );

            // Element access
            value_type& operator[]( size_type index );
            const value_type& operator[]( size_type index ) const;

            value_type& at( size_type index );
            const value_type& at( size_type index ) const;

            value_type& front();
            const value_type& front() const;

            value_type& back();
            const value_type& back() const;

            // Iterators
            iterator begin();
            const_iterator begin() const;
            const_iterator cbegin() const;

            iterator end();
            const_iterator end() const;
            const_iterator cend() const;

            reverse_iterator rbegin();
            const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const;
            const_reverse_iterator crbegin() const;

            reverse_iterator rend();
            const_reverse_iterator rend() const;
            const_reverse_iterator crend() const;

            // Size and capacity
            size_type size() const noexcept;

            bool empty() const noexcept;

            size_type max_size() const noexcept;

            size_type capacity() const noexcept;

            // Concurrently unsafe operations
            void reserve( size_type n );

            void resize( size_type n );
            void resize( size_type n, const value_type& value );

            void shrink_to_fit();

            void swap( concurrent_vector& other ) noexcept(/*See details*/);

            void clear();

            allocator_type get_allocator() const;

            // Parallel iteration
            range_type range( size_type grainsize = 1 );
            const_range_type range( size_type grainsize = 1 ) const;
        }; // class concurrent_vector

    } // namespace tbb
} // namespace oneapi

Requirements#

  • The type T must meet the following requirements:

    • Requirements of Erasable from the [container.requirements] ISO C++ Standard section.

    • Its destructor must not throw an exception.

    • If its default constructor can throw an exception, the destructor must be non-virtual and work correctly on zero-filled memory.

    • Member functions can impose stricter requirements depending on the type of the operation.

  • The type Allocator must meet the Allocator requirements from the [allocator.requirements] ISO C++ section.

Description#

oneapi::tbb::concurrent_vector is a class template that represents a sequence container with the following features:

  • Multiple threads can concurrently grow the container and append new elements.

  • Random access by index. The index of the first element is zero.

  • Growing the container does not invalidate any existing iterators or indices.

Exception Safety#

Concurrent growing is fundamentally incompatible with ideal exception safety. Nonetheless, oneapi::tbb::concurrent_vector offers a practical level of exception safety.

Growth and vector assignment append a sequence of elements to a vector. If an exception occurs, the impact on the vector depends on the cause of the exception:

  • If the exception is thrown by the constructor of an element, all subsequent elements in the appended sequence will be zero-filled.

  • Otherwise, the exception is thrown by the vector allocator. The vector becomes broken. Each element in the appended sequence will be in one of three states:

    • constructed

    • zero-filled

    • unallocated in memory

Once a vector becomes broken, note the following when accessing it:

  • Accessing an unallocated element with the method at causes an exception std::range_error. Accessing an unallocated element using any other method has undefined behavior.

  • The values of capacity() and size() may be less than expected.

  • Access to a broken vector via back() has undefined behavior.

However, the following guarantees hold for broken or unbroken vectors:

  • Let k be an index of an unallocated element. Then size() <= capacity() <= k.

  • Growth operations never cause size() or capacity() to decrease.

If a concurrent growth operation successfully completes, the appended sequence remains valid and accessible even if a subsequent growth operations fails.

Member functions#

Non-member functions#

These functions provide binary and lexicographical comparison and swap operations on oneapi::tbb::concurrent_vector objects.

The exact namespace where these functions are defined is unspecified, as long as they can be used in respective comparison operations. For example, an implementation can define the classes and functions in the same internal namespace and define oneapi::tbb::concurrent_vector as a type alias, for which the non-member functions are reachable only via argument-dependent lookup.

template <typename T, typename Allocator>
bool operator==( const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& lhs,
                 const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& rhs );

template <typename T, typename Allocator>
bool operator!=( const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& lhs,
                 const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& rhs );

template <typename T, typename Allocator>
bool operator<( const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& lhs,
                const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& rhs );

template <typename T, typename Allocator>
bool operator<=( const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& lhs,
                 const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& rhs );

template <typename T, typename Allocator>
bool operator>( const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& lhs,
                const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& rhs );

template <typename T, typename Allocator>
bool operator>=( const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& lhs,
                 const concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& rhs );

template <typename T, typename Allocator>
void swap( concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& lhs,
           concurrent_vector<T, Allocator>& rhs );

Other#